@Fasilkk OK well you cannot have an SSL enabled web server without a certificate of some sort, so if it is working after you ignore the error then you're probably using a self-signed certificate that something created for you
Can you post the exact error message you get please?
@DaveRandom You were right about that elephphant website. I've mailed them about 2 weeks ago, no reply. Still looking for some elephphant love.. but those things are impossible to locate o.o
@Fasilkk You don't want to ignore the error, you need to fix the server. It's serving unencrypted content on port 443, you need to fix the server configuration
@samitha it should have the correct files by default, I've never had to install any dev libs to compile it. What is the error that is showing up when you run ./configure ?
You can't just ignore what is effectively a fatal error. The server is not serving encrypted content. It's not using SSL. You have to configure it correctly before you can go any further.
@Fasilkk Because whoever set up that server set it to listen on port 443 but failed to set up a virtual host to serve SSL on that port, which is a properly stupid thing to do that only someone who should not be administering a public facing webserver would do.
I have a simple download function in a class that might be dealing with files of many hundreds of megabytes at a time from an Amazon Web Services bucket. The whole file cannot be loaded into memory at once, so it must be streamed directly to a file pointer. This is my understanding as this is the...
@tereško Isn't the repository for mainly dealing with collections and sort of giving the illusion of loads of in memory objects that you can retrieve through a wide API
My mappers extend AbstractMapper which holds the identity map and any time I do a fetch and the object has an ID it will check the identity map and also in AbstractMapper::assign(AbstractEntity, Array $row) it does $entity->setId($row['id']); and then adds that entity to the identity map
Well the mapper is the only place I search by ID. The repository would be more like fetchByEmail($email) fetchByTxnId() so it would be pointless to have it in the repository
@BenjaminGruenbaum my AbstractMapper::fetch(AbstractEntity $entity);
That is what it is like
Well it is really like AbstractMapper::fetch(AbstractEntity $entity, Array $conditions); So then my UserRepository for example which holds my UserMapper I have a fetchByEmail(User $user) { return $this->userMapper->fetch($user, array('email' => $user->getEmail())); }
@BenjaminGruenbaum Tell me what you think of that idea. I like it anyway. The mapper is not instantiating the domain object, just cloning it as many times as you need
@Jimbo That's still not DI, and populating a user object makes even less sense than creating it, if you want DI you can pass a userfactory as a second parameter and then the responsibility of creating a user is not on the repo. I don't see why though.
@tereško should that not be the repositories job? The wider interface to retrieve objects in all sorts of different ways and in different orders and limits
@tereško A mapper maps data. It should be able to fetch with an ID. Why would it also be able to fetch by a username and by an email etc. The word repository fits perfectly for that. A place to retrieve objects by giving all sorts of parameters
@Leri I'm not sure, that's how we do it. I never said I'm particularly good at mappers. It makes more sense for a fetch method IMO to return what it found rather than mutate existing objects. Generally I like mutating parameters as little as possible.
@BenjaminGruenbaum In the first place I would not have fetch method in mapper. I suck at application architecture. Usually, my mappers have rule(s) how to map from one type to another, and map($from, $to).
@tereško What are you talking about. I have been saying the mapper interface is very small. It deals with 1 entity at a time. It knows nothing of collections or the like. The repository gives the wide API to retrieve objects and collections in more complex ways
@tereško Aren't we cheerful again :)? A repository means that instead of working against a data mapper and are aware of DB logic you work against an interface that represents a collection of such objects.
Hmm I need to move data from one table to another, I cant have duplicates, is it possible to do this without the NOT IN/NOT EXISTS function? Problem being the table being inserted in to is the HUGE table.
@DaveRandom Leaving any interesting comments/scripts behind?
We'd once tried to come up with the best "I'm leaving" script. We were going to create an encrypted file that creates another file which runs on a CRON to alert the CEO at random times between 2-5 AM about the site being down. The script would then delete itself so it could not be found.
@Fabien I'm familiar with PMA (even know how to guild graphic DB scheme there Oo) - but for common purposes - I think cli is much better cause it's just simpler
To a newbie it's probably quite daunting. Cli that is. I mean the typical progression is straight to PhpMyAdmin, most people don't see/know about the cli interface till a senior person introduces it.
@AlmaDo sorry for the interruption and thank you so much for the reply in my yesterday's question... I re-commented that question, can I get some final opinion from your side? stackoverflow.com/questions/19832904/…. Ty so much!
I'm currently writing a php contact form and I get a syntax error with my check_input : unexpected "," on line 9
l6 $name = check_input($_POST['name'], "Veuillez Indiquer votre nom");
l7 $position = check_input($_POST['position'], "Veuillez indiquer votre profession");
l8 $email =...
I've been over and over it, but still can't work out why the server is telling me that it isn't expecting the ';' on line 19. Which is the following line:
('$_POST[modulecode]','$_POST[school]','$_POST[date]')";
<?php
$link=mysqli_connect("bla","bla","bla","bla");
// Check connection
if (mysq...